You're right. The stack was there.

First, I was inaccurate when I said I installed 6.2.  I actually installed 6.0, 
and later updated via yum.

Second, yeah I was able to start the network service, so there was a stack.  
All I'd get would be the loopback or "lo" interface, but it was there.

But going into /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts was a pain because there was no 
ifcfg-eth0 file I could play with.  That's when I gave up and re-installed, but 
added more stuff beyond "base" just to be sure.

As for not configuring the network during the install process, I was pretty 
sure I had.  For some reason it didn't take.  Maybe I didn't click a save box 
when I should have.  I don't know.
    === Al


________________________________
From: Johnny Hughes <joh...@centos.org>
To: centos@centos.org 
Sent: Tuesday, April 24, 2012 6:04 PM
Subject: Re: [CentOS] Not Quite Minimal CentOS 6.2

On 04/24/2012 08:53 PM, Al Sparks wrote:
> I recently did a minimal 6.2 install recently, and it was annoying that it 
> didn't include the network stack.
>
> What use is an install w/o the network?
>

It has the network stack ... you must configure it during the install.

If you do not configure and enable the ethernet card then it does not
turn on by default ... but it is in the installer to be able to do:

http://wiki.centos.org/FAQ/CentOS6#head-b67e85d98f0e9f1b599358105c551632c6ff7c90


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